Batis (commander)

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Batis (died 332 BC) was a

the city that connected the only road between Egypt and the rest of the empire, thus blocking Alexander from entering that province.[3] Batis not only rejected entreaties to surrender the city without the fight but, even after defeat, refused to submit to the Macedonians or to acknowledge Alexander as the new King of Asia, which enraged Alexander. Reportedly, a rope was inserted through Batis' Achilles tendon and the lower bones of his legs and was dragged behind a chariot around his city walls until he died in the manner as Hector had been treated by Alexander's hero Achilles,[4][5] except that Hector had already been dead when he was dragged.[6]

References